SSD Tweaks and Optimizations in Windows 7

Hello to all my fellow and future users of SSD drives and Windows 7.
I wanted to set up an area with real-world tips on getting the most out of your SSD and the Windows 7 operating system. I will separate each type of tip to its own message to keep things easier to read and to follow.

All of this has been tested on my laptop system, configured as follows:
HP DV2270us, Core 2 qual 2ghz, 4 Gig RAM.
Disk 0: Patriot M28 64-gig SSD 240MBs (Boot drive), Disk 1: Seagate ST9500420AS 500 Gig 100MBs second drive.
Windows 7 ultimate 64-bit.
Machine is used all day every day at work and home, lots of virtual machines running.

These suggestions are just the way I choose to set things up and get GREAT performance and utilize the SSD to its fullest potential. Your mileage may and probably vary. The tutorials and suggestions are not meant to be debated, its all up to you to decide if you want to try them or not.
All standard disclaimers apply... I am not responsible for breaking your stuff, only mine.
With all that said, on with the tutorials...:party:
FYI, lightningltd here (me) and magic-man on other forums are one in the same, So I am posting this tutorial here with my permission. :what:




This tutorial is for those who are already running Windows 7 on their SSD as a boot drive. If like me, you first installed to hard drive then used an image backup program to put the OS on the SSD, then this step is necessary to allow Windows 7 to set the proper settings for SSD use and set things up for optimizing the OS after burning the firmware and/or cleaning the drive to factory specs. If you installed directly to the your SSD, you don't need to follow this step, but it can be helpful if you followed the XP and vista SSD guides and things just aren't up to snuff.

*** read all the steps first so you can create the images and boot USB and CD/DVD and print the instructions before you start***

FIRST.... MAKE A BACKUP IMAGE just in case!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Be sure to create the restore disk, too.

Basically, you need to do a repair install of Windows 7 so Windows can set itself up properly for SSD use. The following link will step you through this step:
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/3413-repair-install.html
When done, we need to verify that TRIM is active. At a command prompt (start/run/cmd), type the following: fsutil.exe behavior query DisableDeleteNotify

It should respond back with DisableDeleteNotify=0 if trim support is ready and active. If it is not, type fsutil.exe behavior set DisableDeleteNotify 0

This will set Windows 7 to use TRIM when the drive and drivers are ready to do so.

Next, we need to make sure our ATA/ATAPI ACHI controller is set to use trim.
EDIT! 3/22/10: The new INTEL chipset drivers 9.6.0.1014 support TRIM! Use these instead of the MS AHCI ones for Intel Chipsets.
RAID: Intel® Rapid Storage Technology Driver for Intel Desktop Boards

For non-intel chipsets:
To see/change it, go to device manager and select IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers. If it says "Standard AHCI 1.0 Serial ATA Controller", you are good to go. If not, double click it and select the driver tab. Click update driver. Select browse. Select let me pick. select Standard AHCI 1.0 Serial ATA Controller.

Once it has reboot and all is fine, then U can go on to the next step (after making an IMAGE backup of the whole SSD with the new changes (I use Windows backup)).

This step is necessary IF you have been using the SSD for a while before updating the firmware and/or want to return performance back to factory fresh (this will fix isues created if you ran 'tony-trim' method on another site). I did it right after the firmware update since it will ERASE the entire SSD, losing all data. It is called an ATA secure erase for a reason.
some of the firmware update tools do not issue the proper ATA secure erase command when they are done (Like the samsung), so the SSD will 'inherit' any performance issues it had before. Using this method resets all the memory cells to factory values.

IF you just pulled the SSD out of the box and updated it, or have never used it, then this step is NOT NEEDED.
Remember! Make sure U have that image backup I keep yelling about, you WILL lose everything on the SSD if you haven't already!

Download and print the instructions from http://ata.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/ATA_Secure_Erase
Get the lin*x boot image from http://partedmagic.com/ and burn it to a CD/DVD.
Boot to the CD/DVD and click the bottom where it looks like a black window (prompt).
Follow the instructions you just printed. On my laptop, I had to unplug the SSD while the OS was running and plug it back in real quick to make it not be frozen as in the instructions.

When all done, you have a nice empty clean SSD to restore your image to!
Restore the image to the drive and boot up.

See U at the next part... Optimizing Windows 7 for the SSD!




Now that you have gotten everything done as far as firmware, and image restored and have a working Windows 7, we can do some things to make Windows 7 a bit 'friendlier' to your SSD and make things faster to boot.

FWIW, Microsoft did a great job in pre-optimizing Windows 7 for SSD use. Except for installation, over 95% of Windows 7 operations are READS, perfect for your SSD. You COULD just use it as is and things would be fantastic. BUT, there are some things to verify first.....

1: Verify that TRIM is enabled as in the prior messages.
2: Make sure your AHCI controller is using a TRIM compliant driver as in the prior messages.
3: Make sure the defrag program is disabled for the SSD... Admin tools/Services set Disk Defragmenter to disabled. I use auslogics disk defrag (free) for my other drives manually. U almost never have to defrag an SSD. It can lower its life expectancy.
4: Page File. There has been much debate about this. The idea that no one needs a page file is a bunch of crap. I have tried it both ways, moitoring writes and reads, and YES, it IS used even with 8 Gigs of RAM. I left mine at 2 Gigs, but it is just fine at 1 Gig. Writes to the page file are sequential now. Page file is also read at boot time to speed things. Keep it on your SSD where it belongs.
5: Superfetch/prefetch/bootfetch: Windows 7 does not always turn it all off as it should. The purpose of these things are to pre-load the programs you load from slow hard drive to fast memory (cache) in case you want to run them. With your SSD, there is no need. We will disable them and free up some memory and resources and stop a LOT of writes to the SSD.
To disable Superfetch, etc: Admin tools/Services. Select superfetch and set to disabled.
Run regedit and change the following values: HKLM/System/CurrentControlset/Control/Session Manager/Memory Management/Prefetch Parameters and change the key valus of Enableboottrace, enableprefetcher, enablesuperfetch all to 0 and exit regedit.

This will disable MOST of the superfetch/prefetch stuff... The boot prefetch will get disabled in the next part along with some un-necessary logging that is done (and writes a lot).




Now on to some things we can do to reduce some on the unnecessary writes to the SSD. Windows 7 has the most event logs that I have seen of any OS. If you are having issues, then I would not change the logging options. If not, then we can stop a lot of writes that frankly, only an engineer would need (we leave the basic event logs alone).
Go to start/admin tools and select performance monitor. Expand data collector sets. Click on Startup Event Trace Sessions.
With the exception of the following NECESSARY logs (Application, Security, System, Security Essentials) we can stop them from starting. To do so, right click on each one that has a status of Enabled (except the ones mentioned above) and select Properties. Click the Trace Session tab. Unselect Enabled. Click Ok. Repeat for the others (including readyboot).
After your next boot, you will have a lot less writes going to the SSD that are not needed.

Write caching... Enable on the SSD: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/10392-write-caching-enable-disable.html
TEMP FILES... IF you have another NON SSD drive installed, I would move the TEMP and temporary internet files to them (next message(tutorial page)).

Since I have Windows 7 make an image backup of the SSD to my other drive every day (only takes a few minutes and very little resources), I completely turn off system protection (system restore).

You can also turn off Windows reliability monitor. I will post a short tutorial if you want. It does quite a bit of writing too, but only every few hours.

There are some other more advanced things I do, but to be honest, they result in very little speed increase (less than 5%).
how do you "TEMP FILES... IF you have another NON SSD drive installed, I would move the TEMP and temporary internet files to them."
another question: doesn't superfetch run in the ram?
one more question: what do you find you need the paging file for with 8 gb ram? i have found ive never needed it for anything just curious why you think this or what you have found that needs it
Changing location of temp files: http://ask-leo.com/how_do_i_change_the_location_of_windows_temporary_files.html
Changing location of IE temp files: Move Temporary Internet Files Folder - Internet Explorer 7 Misc
Superfetch does run in Ram, but it also does a lot of reading and writing. Remember, the object of superfetch is to copy program stubs from SLOW hard disk to fast RAM. With an SSD, this is not needed, since the SSD reads so fast. I recommend you try it with it on, then try it with the service disabled. You likely will not see any slow down, actually a speed up since more RAM is available for other things and there will be a marked decrease in disk writes/accesses.

Windows 7 does use the page file IF PRESENT to keep things effecient. Several programs use it like VMWARE, some games, graphics software, MS office, etc... It will only use it when it is effecient to do so. With 8 Gigs of RAM a 1 GIG page file is plenty. Remember: the page file in Windows 7 is more sequential now, and therefore much more efficient. One of my MS sources also told me that there is some cached boot code in it to speed up boot, but to be honest, I haven't seen a difference. I can tell you that it IS smoother with even a 512 Meg page file on the SSD.
Try it both ways with your read-world load and decide for yourself. There is no bench-mark for it other than your gut. That is why it is so debated.

could you also explain: You can also turn off Windows reliability monitor

Admin tools, open task scheduler. expand task scheduler library, then Microsoft, then Windows. Scroll down and click on RAC. Go to the top and select View then show hidden tasks IF RACTASK is not showing. Right click on RacTask and select disable. To re-enable it, you right click it and select enable.
Here is the good part.... disabling it stops it from PROCESSING reliability data and errors for reliability viewer. The data is still collected in the logs, just stored effeciently. You can re-enable it and see the reliability stuff when U wish. Disabling it saved RAM and some drive churning until U need to look at it.

There are some other more advanced things I do, but to be honest, they result in very little speed increase (less than 5%).
please share

Some of what I do is not limited to SSD, but overall OS optimization...
Services... I used the black viper guide and got mine trimmed down some without losing functionality of Win 7... I like it the way it is (almost). U can read up on what each service does and decide for yourself...
http://www.blackviper.com/Windows_7/servicecfg.htm

However, here are the services on my machine (laptop):

View attachment w7srvcs.txt
Tab separated file with MY service config...
 
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Great tutorial. I look forward to using it tomorrow when all my new gear arrives.

A (stupid) question re defrag. What you have written makes a lot of sense re the SSD, but I intend to put all my data (and other non essential stuff) on a 1TB SATA drive.

Can I still defrag the SATA drive occasionally using MyDefrag?
 

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No problems defragmenting a regular SATA drive - best to do it once a week even if it only contains data and non-essential stuff.
 

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[/QUOTE]
If you want to set cmd to always run in elevated mode, right click on cmd (in Accessories) > Advanced > and check the box "Run as administrator" > OK > Apply
Now it always runs in elevated mode.
QUOTE]

I am trying to run chkdsk M:/f from the cmd window and getting the response "Access denied you do not have sufficient privileges. You have to invoke this utility running in elevated mde"

I am signed on as an administrator. I have right clicked on accessories, command - prompt - properites - advanced and checked the run as administrator box. I have also tried running command prompt as in the quote above. Nothing seems to work.

Any suggestions on how I can 'get into' elevated mode?
 

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My HDD Tune results

Config
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Windows 7 Ultimate

Min 258 Max 261 Average 260
Access time 0.2ms
Burst 139.3
CPU -1.0%

Any tips to improve it?
Win exper disk score 7.5
 

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How would you expect to improve on that? That's pretty much inline with what you are going to get out of that drive. Looks great.
 

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Your right, my OCD almost took over !

The fact is, Im very happy I decided to make the jump to ssd, with all the free "Cloud" storage out there these days, the average person dosent need a gagillion Terabytes of storage anymore,which puts more focus on performance! A win, win for everyone in my opinion. I still cant get over how fast Windows loads, I recommend making the ssd jump to anyone, you will be pleasently suprised.

Oh,... and before I forget, thank you for the tutorial(s)! I couldnt have made the jump up without them. Very well done sir! Honestly you probably saved me coutless hours and frustration, so again thank you !
 

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Now on to some things we can do to reduce some on the unnecessary writes to the SSD. Windows 7 has the most event logs that I have seen of any OS. If you are having issues, then I would not change the logging options. If not, then we can stop a lot of writes that frankly, only an engineer would need (we leave the basic event logs alone).
Go to start/admin tools and select performance monitor. Expand data collector sets. Click on Startup Event Trace Sessions.
With the exception of the following NECESSARY logs (Application, Security, System, Security Essentials) we can stop them from starting. To do so, right click on each one that has a status of Enabled (except the ones mentioned above) and select Properties. Click the Trace Session tab. Unselect Enabled. Click Ok. Repeat for the others (including readyboot).
After your next boot, you will have a lot less writes going to the SSD that are not needed.

I think most of these ideas work great, but turning off DiagLog in the Performance Monitor has the unexpected (at least for me) consequence of also shutting down Diagnostic Policy Services (DPS). I sometimes try to diagnose Internet connection problems, and after this tweak I couldn't because DPS would not run, even though the service was set to automatic. After enabling DiagLog again and rebooting, I now have the diagnostics back. So, if you use diagnostics occasionally like I do, don't disable DiagLog.

Keith
 

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After enabling DiagLog again and rebooting, I now have the diagnostics back. Keith
Thanks for this. I had also lost the Diagnostic Policy Services (DPS) and couldn't work out how to get it back. I don't need it very often, but this tip helps get it back when I do need it.
 

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GA-890GPA-UD3H
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G.Skill Ripjaws F3-12800CL9S - 8GB
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SSD Tweaks & Optimization in Window 7 ??

Is this entire guide available somewhere in a PDF or DOC format that I could download? I'd like to tuck this away on my HDD for future reference.

Your guide was great!! My WEI score is 7.5 on my SSD which is only a very small fractional difference from the processor(AMD FX-8150) & memory scores.

Thanks for the guide & have a great day!!!
Jim
 

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I have 16GB of RAM and have disabled the swap file... I use VMware Workstation a few times a week but mostly I'm browsing, light photo editing, email, etc. Any real advantage to enabling the swap file?
 

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This tutorial is for those who are already running Windows 7 on their SSD as a boot drive. If like me, you first installed to hard drive then used an image backup program to put the OS on the SSD, then this step is necessary to allow Windows 7 to set the proper settings for SSD use and set things up for optimizing the OS after burning the firmware and/or cleaning the drive to factory specs. If you installed directly to the your SSD, you don't need to follow this step, but it can be helpful if you followed the XP and vista SSD guides and things just aren't up to snuff.

Hi. I just installed Windows 7 Ultimate x64 directly to an SSD (Kingston SSD Now 100V 128GB) after cleaning the entire disk with DISKPART. I have an Intel DG45ID board. I'm trying to figure out whether I need to install the Intel Rapid Storage Technology Driver or not. It looks like a tricky install, so I wanted to make sure I need to before I go ahead.

Thanks and thanks!
 

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Hiyya lightningltd

Mate I am a bit wary of setting this up as you have given so many dire warnings and I am prone to turning awkward situations into impossible ones so what I would like to know is
1. Is this really necessary to have running?
2. I fit is then how do I get past what is in the pic?

Thanks
John
PS Am running 7 64bit on a Crucial 128GB M4
 

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Hello John,

That command just needs to be ran in a elevated command prompt instead. :)


Thanks Shawn sorry to be a nuisance I did have a look but had obviously missed the right click bit :o and I'm a GURU?? reckon there should be a badge for the clueless:rolleyes:
 
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Hard Drives
Desk1 Samsung 120GB 830 SSD
Asus ROG 256GB 850 Pro SSD
Desk2 Samsung 840 256 SSD
Toshiba 120GB EVO
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Desk 1 Corsair HX 1050/ Laptop ? / Desk 2 Corsair HX 650
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Desk 1 Cooler HAF XM ? Toshiba laptop / Desk2 Coolermaster
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Fans on all Desk1 -2 Desk2 - all Coolermasters 5 Laptop ?
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Running Kaspersky 2016 ISS on all machines config'd identically
Logitec audio stereo systems on each machine (x3)
Canon MG5250MFC
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LOL, don't worry about it John. We all do the same thing at times. :)
 

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Thermaltake Core P3
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Corsair Hydro H115i
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Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Premium
Browser
Google Chrome
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Logitech Z625 speaker system,
Logitech BRIO 4K Pro webcam,
HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M477fdn,
APC SMART-UPS RT 1000 XL - SURT1000XLI,
Galaxy S23 Plus phone
WOW you helped me a lot with this guide and you def know your SSD's thanks heaps, just bought a OCZ Agility 3 but using SATA2 my motherboard has no SATA 3 connections :( oh well I'm more than impressed with the impact it's had on m system.
 

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Self Built
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium (64 bit)
CPU
Intel I5 2500K 3.3Ghz Stock
Motherboard
Asus P8H 61-M LE USB 3
Memory
8Gig Kingston DDRIII HyperX Blue 1333 Mhz
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Sapphire 7870 2GB
Sound Card
Creative Fatality Pro
Monitor(s) Displays
27" BENQ LED
Screen Resolution
1920X1080
Hard Drives
1 x OCZ Agility 3 120GB SSD
1 x Seagate 250GB
1 x Western Digital 1000GB
1 x HP 500GB
PSU
700W Coolermaster Stealth Pro etc
Case
Coolermaster Scout
Cooling
Some fans
Keyboard
Some Logitech type.
Mouse
Logitech MX518
Internet Speed
Wireless 8mb
Other Info
Canon Scanner
Epson Printer
Nikon DSLR 3000
Wacom Tablet
lightningltd, Thanks alot for the SSD tips. I just got a Corsair F60 for $40. And is my first SSD drive. Helped me tonnes!!! :D
 

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Windows 7 PRO 64-bit
OS
Windows 7 PRO 64-bit
Since I have Windows 7 make an image backup of the SSD to my other drive every day (only takes a few minutes and very little resources), I completely turn off system protection (system restore).

Hello,

can you please explain this one? step by step? Many thx
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Enterprise x64Intel i7 2760QM 2.4GhzCorsair 8GB 1333MHz DDR3AMD Radeon HD6770M
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
MacBook Pro 15inch
OS
Windows 7 Enterprise x64
CPU
Intel i7 2760QM 2.4Ghz
Motherboard
Mac-94245A3940C91C80
Memory
Corsair 8GB 1333MHz DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon HD6770M
Sound Card
Apple
Monitor(s) Displays
Apple Cinema Display 27Inch
Screen Resolution
2560x1440
Hard Drives
Vertex3 120GB SSD
TOSHIBA 750GB HDD
PSU
Apple
Case
Apple
Cooling
Apple
Keyboard
Apple Wireless Keyboard
Mouse
Apple Magic Mouse
Hello Omazic, and welcome to Seven Forums.

Personally, if you have the available HDD space, I would not recommend to turn off system protection for restore points and previous versions (shadow copies). Being able to do a system restore back to a selected restore point can be a quick way to save yourself from something you just did that made your system unstable.

For more information about System Protection and System Images, the tutorials below can help. :)

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/330-system-protection-turn-off.html

and

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/663-backup-complete-computer-create-image-backup.html

Hope this helps,
Shawn
 

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64-bit Windows 11 Pro for WorkstationsIntel i7-8700K OC'd to 5 GHz64 GB (4x16GB) G.SKILL TridentZ RGB DDR4 3600...ASUS ROG-STRIX-GTX1080TI-O11G-GAMING
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self built custom
OS
64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
CPU
Intel i7-8700K OC'd to 5 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS ROG Maximus XI Formula Z390
Memory
64 GB (4x16GB) G.SKILL TridentZ RGB DDR4 3600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS ROG-STRIX-GTX1080TI-O11G-GAMING
Sound Card
Integrated
Monitor(s) Displays
2 x Samsung Odyssey G7 27"
Screen Resolution
2560x1440
Hard Drives
1TB Samsung 990 PRO M.2,
4TB Samsung 990 PRO PRO M.2,
TerraMaster F8 SSD Plus NAS
PSU
Seasonic Prime Titanium 850W
Case
Thermaltake Core P3
Cooling
Corsair Hydro H115i
Keyboard
Logitech wireless K800
Mouse
Logitech MX Master 4
Internet Speed
2 Gb/s Download and 100 Mb/s Upload
Antivirus
Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Premium
Browser
Google Chrome
Other Info
Logitech Z625 speaker system,
Logitech BRIO 4K Pro webcam,
HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M477fdn,
APC SMART-UPS RT 1000 XL - SURT1000XLI,
Galaxy S23 Plus phone
Hello Omazic, and welcome to Seven Forums.

Personally, if you have the available HDD space, I would not recommend to turn off system protection for restore points and previous versions (shadow copies). Being able to do a system restore back to a selected restore point can be a quick way to save yourself from something you just did that made your system unstable.

For more information about System Protection and System Images, the tutorials below can help. :)

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/330-system-protection-turn-off.html

and

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/663-backup-complete-computer-create-image-backup.html

Hope this helps,
Shawn

Hello,

many thanks on quick answer. In my case (SSD) I will go with second option.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Enterprise x64Intel i7 2760QM 2.4GhzCorsair 8GB 1333MHz DDR3AMD Radeon HD6770M
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
MacBook Pro 15inch
OS
Windows 7 Enterprise x64
CPU
Intel i7 2760QM 2.4Ghz
Motherboard
Mac-94245A3940C91C80
Memory
Corsair 8GB 1333MHz DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon HD6770M
Sound Card
Apple
Monitor(s) Displays
Apple Cinema Display 27Inch
Screen Resolution
2560x1440
Hard Drives
Vertex3 120GB SSD
TOSHIBA 750GB HDD
PSU
Apple
Case
Apple
Cooling
Apple
Keyboard
Apple Wireless Keyboard
Mouse
Apple Magic Mouse
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